TO OUR CORRESPONDENTS
... Te insure insertion in this paper, all communication, should be addressed to The Editor.' ...
... Te insure insertion in this paper, all communication, should be addressed to The Editor.' ...
... FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. TU RKE Y? Advices have been received from Constantinople to the 7th inst., which state that the Sultan nearly lost his life last Saturday. An Ionian captain commanding an English steam-tug, drove his vessel twice against the imperial caique, and the Sultan was saved with great difiicult). The captain has been arrested, and Sir Henry Bulwer has assured the Government the ...
... A RETURN OF WRECKS IN LIVERPOOL BAY DURING 1858.-From a return presented yesterday to the Mersey Dock Board, it appears that during last year twenty-five vessels were wrecked. Of these twelve were totally lost, and the remainder, with four exceptions, either raised or removed. PROPOSED EXTENSION OF THE LIVERPOOL DOCKS.— The new Liverpool Dock Board resolved, at a special meeting on Saturday, ...
... T E N B Y. An Excursion Party left Tenby on Thursday, the 25th for Ilfracombe by the Prince of Wales steam-packet. A goodly number left Tenby, and the weather being fine, returned much pleased with the excursion. Lovers of Art will not think it amiss when we inform them that a large collection of sketches and drawings by the late Charles Morris, Esq, of Waterwynche* near Tenby, comprising ...
... INDIA. The following telegram from Acting Consul-General Green was received at the Foreign Office at 11 p m. on Saturday •— ALEXANDRIA, DEC 25, 1858.—The steamer Bombay arrived at Suez from Bombay on the 21st. with dates to the 9th. The steamer Emeu also arrived on the 21st from Australia. The amnesty is slowly but surely thinning the ranks of the rebels; and there is good reason for believing ...
... THE PLANTER'S INVENTORY. CHAPTER IJI. (Continued from our last.) The task of the uncle and Jackson lasted for a week, during which Mary did not leave her room, in order that she might not encounter the planter. These hours passed in retirement, however, seemed to calm her fears. Society may divert the mind for a time from the cares which press upon it, but that relief which depends upon others ...
... We understand from the Tenby Observer that during the past week Mr Pease and the Rev. G. N. Smitb opened a tumulus near Ivy Tower, and discovered an ancient British urn of very rude workmanship and imperfectly baked. The Tenby Races are, we believe, definitively fixed for the 20th and 22nd of September. This arrangement gives great satisfaction, as the 'meet' was expected earlier, which would ...
... ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS.—Mr William Davies, of the London Hospital (son of Mr J. Davies, of MOil- grove) passed his primary examination in Anatomy .and Physiology, on the 23rd and 28th of March. ...
... LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. AN ADDER was killed on Monday week, at Freystrop, by a man named John Bennett, residing in that neigh- bourhood. It was of a good size in girth, and measured upwards of two feet in length. PROMOTIONS—We are glad to find, from the last Army and Navy Gazette, that Major George Warren Stokes has been promoted to the rank of Lieut. Colonel, and Lieutenant Henry Stokes, R.N., to ...
... MILFORD. SALE OF VERY SUPERIOR MODERN HOUSE. HOLD FURNITURE, ie. MR. HEN It Y D A V I E S. Is instructed to SELL BY AUCTION, on Thursday, 16th of May, 1861, THE whele of the valuable and modern HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, China, Glass, and Earthenware, Plated Goods and other effects, at No. 43, Charles Street, late the property of the Rev. Julian Probyn, deceased, Comprising handsome loo, Pembroke, ...
... A MAN CUT IN Two.—On Thursday afternoon, the 26th ult., a frightful occurrence took place at the Morfa Copper Works, Landore, near Swansea. About three o'clock in the afternoon, one of the workmen employed in the rolling mills, named William Palmer, was observed to mount' to the top of the fence which protects the machinery in motion, and to deliberately fall in among the wheels. The result ...
... TItE, QUEEN OF MADAGASCAR AND THE MISSIONARIES. A letter from the Rev. William Ellis, published in the Missionary Magazine, gives an account of an interview which he had had with the Queen. He represented to her Majesty the state and prospects of missionary work, the interest taken in it hy Christians in Englanti; ibc projected erection of the memorial churches, the expected arrival of four ...